Profits from this book go to BookTrust, the UK's largest children's reading charity. Topically Challenged Volume 1 contains 100 news-themed stories from 100 authors who submitted their work to Alice's 'Trump This' News Writing Challenge on Chris Fielden’s website. They A.H. Creed, A S Winter, Alan Barker, Alan Pattison, Allan Tweddle, Allen Ashley, Amanda Garzia, Andrea Goyan, Andrew Ball, Andrew Carter, Andrew Stiggers, Antonio Salituro, Ashutosh Pant, Barbara Hull, Benjamin Noel, Betty Hattersley, Brian Mackinney, Bridget Scrannage, Cathy Cade, Chris Espenshade, Chris Green, Chris Lee, Christopher Fielden, Clare Tivey, D.G. Kaye, David McTigue, David Rosenblum, David Silver, Debbie Singh, Dee La Vardera, Derek McMillan, Dora Bona, Dr Betty, Duane L. Herrmann, E. F. S. Byrne, Edmund Piper, Francesca Pappadogiannis, Frank Havemann, Gail Everett, Gary McGrath, Gavin Biddlecombe, Geja Hadderingh, Glen Donaldson, Guy Monson, Hajra Saeed, Hullabaloo22, Jack Caldwell-Nichols, Jacob Weller, James Goodman, James Louis Peel, John Gisby, John Holmes, John Notley, Jon Drake, Jon Spencer, Josie Gowler, K. J. Watson, Kelly Van Nelson, Ken Frape, Kenneth Muir, Klaus Gehling, Kwame M.A. McPherson, Len Saculla, Lesley Anne Truchet, Leslie Roberts, Louise Burgess, Lucy Morrice, Lynne Chitty, Madeleine Fox, Maggie Elliott, Majella Pinto, Malcolm Richardson, Mark J Towers, Matilda Pinto, Meghan O'Brien, Mehak Vijay Chawla, Michael Rumsey, Mike Scott Thomson, Nam Raj Khatri, Paul Mastaglio, Peggy Gerber, Pete Armstrong, Peter J. Corbally, Raymond E. Strawn III, Sam Nichols, Sandra Orellana, Sarah Charmley, Sarah Mosedale, Simon Williams, Stacey George, Stephen P. Thompson, Steven Barrett, Teresia Nicolas, Tiffany H White, Tony Thatcher, Vaki Kokkinaki, Valerie Fish, W R Daniel, Yvonne Mallett and Yvonne Mastaglio. The news writing challenge was created to raise awareness of the importance of a story’s theme, support authors and raise money for charity. Every story submitted to the challenge is published, so writers can gain the experience of having their work edited and then see their stories distributed in print and eBook formats all over the planet. Profits generated by sales of this book are donated to BookTrust, the UK's largest children's reading charity. They transform lives by getting children and families reading. Please help us raise money for this worthy cause and spread the joy of topical stories around the world – buy this book :-) You will find many writing challenges, all run in support of charities, on Chris’s website in the 'challenges' section.
Breaking News. In this anthology writers were invited to turn a news headline of the day into a fictional story. Selected headlines include Cat Hitches Ride On Lorry, Coachella of Conciousness, Revolting Rhymes. . Clever twists turn A Sacking into a promotion, An Accident becomes a rebirth and The Promise, well haven’t we heard that before? 100 stories each with a maximum of 180 words by 100 different authors. The result is amusement, entertainment and surprise. Available from Amazon, the sale of every book makes a generous charity payment to BookTrust.
I am one of the authors who contributed to this writing challenge that ultimately, became a book, an anthology of stories told in flash fiction or micro short story fashion. The writers were asked to compose a fictional story based on a headline that grabbed us. The topic of the anthology writing challenge was titled: Alice’s ‘Trump This’ News Writing Challenge. The idea was to choose a headline from the news that ‘spoke to us’ and write a short fictional story that would coincide with the title of the news article.
In this book there are 100 creative and entertaining stories on a multitude of topics that touched writers in various ways. Many stories stemmed from politics – mainly US and UK related. Topics talked about cover a myriad of social issues from politics, medical system, animal rights, environmental issues, bullying, transgender issues, to racism and more. Every story is told in each author’s choice of style whether in sarcasm, satire, cynism, even humor. And like Fielden mentions in his intro this book, “If a theme resonates with a reader, it can help them remember a story long after they’ve finished it”.
Just to share a few of the many stories that resonated with me:
Why Do My Nipples Hurt? Written by Chris Espenshade, cracked me right up. The headline he chose was inspired by Trump’s comment after the hate crime spree in a Pittsburgh synagogue – comedic sarcasm.
End by Allen Ashley. – Inspired by ‘the end of austerity’ on the BBC 2018 budget – government cynicism.
For Whose God and Which Country by Kwame MA McPherson – Inspired by the headline of Trump abandoning his umbrella, (MSNBC), while stepping on to Airforce 1 – fictional nonfiction.
You’re Fired by Dr. Betty. Inspired by the false alarm, missile threat alert in Hawaii, headlined on CNN – chilling ending!
Thoughts and Prayers by David Rosenblum – they do nothing.
Red Card by Jon Spencer – another chilling ending as Russia takes over the world.
Droning On by Len Sucalla – Inspired by the story of a drone hitting Gatwick airport.
Roald Dahl Whose Verses Were Censored by Gail Everett – Inspired by Aldi stores in Australia removing ‘revolting rhymes’.
Truth Uncovered by James Louis Peel – Inspired by Trump attacking his own CDC on how to reopen schools – hilarious satire written in sci-fi style, taking place in the year 2892.
The Fruit-Full Argument by A.S. Winter – Inspired by Apple’s fight with someone’s choice to use a pear as their logo.
Disney Self Identity vs. Labels by Raymond E. Strawn – Inspired by controversy over Disney choosing a new ‘black’ Ariel.
And last, but far from least, my own spin at a flash fiction that raises a question – What Do We Tell The Children? – Inspired by ‘The Children at Trump Rallies’ headline by Damon Winter, New York Times – #ChildAwareness and A parent’s dilemma.
For those of you who enjoy short stories and flashfiction that leaves a mark, I invite you to grab yourselves a copy of this entertaining book, and if you enjoy it, please don’t forget to leave a review.
If you like flash fiction with an edge, I think you’ll really like this collection, like I did. A fun and creative, if at times sardonic play on mainstream and utterly obscure headlines, compiled during the lockdown of the pandemic. For the most part, as you might expect, there is a lot of left-wing, anti-Trump, anti-Brexit vitriol in some of these 150-word or so vignettes – thankfully, that’s not all the book is about, though. All in all, the authors are good quality, and the cause that sales of this book are aimed to contribute toward is an extremely worthy one. From the Mexican wall to a drunk pig picking a fight with a cow, there’s pretty much every tone of news story you can think of here, right down to the obscure and the comical. In the main, they are humorous, usually cynical and occasionally downright, thinly-veiled anger at mainly political news.
I read the book in one sitting, which perhaps wasn’t the best way to enjoy it, particularly given the poetic style of prose many of the authors write with. But I enjoyed it a great deal. I won’t share a favourite, even though I did have one or two, I admit, because this composition is all about the sum of its parts – parts every bit as varied as the authors who created them. Some are professional flash fiction authors, others dipping their toe for the first time, but all are very good. The variations in the accomplishment and writing experience of some over others only adds to the complement and each provides a unique ingredient to the mix. It is a good selection in terms of both quality and entertainment, and I think you’d be hard pressed to find someone who wouldn’t be entertained by at least some of it. A little bit heavy on the Trump humour, which I’m not a fan of, to tell the truth – don’t get me wrong; I’m no fan of the man himself, I just find him a particularly unoriginal and tedious source of observational material. And original is entirely what this book is all about, as are the components within it. In fact, it is better fun generally when it focuses on the more fun and wacky new items (think of the source quality as like the contrast between "Have I Got News For You?" and "Monty Python").
All in all, a good, original and enjoyable read, which I think is better enjoyed as small snippets fitted into moments whenever you can find them. The authors are multi-talented and multi-cultural, and the editors have done a great job curating them, for a great charity objective. Good luck to all involved in the project.